PLoS ONE (Jan 2019)

Black people are convicted more for being black than for being poor: The role of social norms and cultural prejudice on biased racial judgments.

  • Tiago Jessé Souza de Lima,
  • Cicero Roberto Pereira,
  • Ana Raquel Rosas Torres,
  • Luana Elayne Cunha de Souza,
  • Iara Maribondo Albuquerque

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0222874
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 9
p. e0222874

Abstract

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Black and poor people are more frequently convicted of committing crimes. However, the specific role played by skin color and social class in convicting a person has yet to be clarified. This article aims to elucidate this issue by proposing that belonging to a lower social class facilitates the conviction of black targets and that this phenomenon is because information about social class dissimulates racial bias. Study 1 (N = 160) demonstrated that information about belonging to the lower classes increases agreement with a criminal suspect being sentenced to prison only when described as being black. Furthermore, Studies 2 (N = 170) and 3 (N = 174) show that the anti-prejudice norm inhibits discrimination against the black target when participants were asked to express individual racial prejudice, but not when they expressed cultural racial prejudice. Finally, Study 4 (N = 134) demonstrated that lower-class black targets were discriminated against to a greater degree when participants expressed either individual or cultural prejudice and showed that this occurs when racial and class anti-prejudice norms are salient. The results suggest that social class negatively affects judgments of black targets because judgment based on lower class mitigates the racist motivation of discrimination.